Strategy
RBC Wealth Management Says It "Remains Committed" To Asia Following Sale Speculation

Last week, it was reported that Canada's largest lender had placed its Asian wealth management business under review, which could lead to a potential sale of the unit.
Royal
Bank of Canada has hit back at media claims that it is
contemplating selling its Asian wealth management business,
saying it “remains committed to the region”.
Last week, Reuters reported that Canada's largest lender
had put its Asian wealth arm under review, which could lead to a
sale of the unit. The news service anonymously cited four people
familiar with the matter.
In recent years, numerous Western firms have withdrawn from
Asia's private banking sphere, hurt by pressure to reduce costs
closer to home, slow growth and swelling compliance
costs.
Most recently, the Netherlands' biggest bank, ABN
Amro, agreed
in December last year to sell off its private banking operations
in Asia and the Middle East, which has $20 billion in assets,
to Liechtenstein-headquartered LGT.
The review of RBC's Asian wealth business was sparked because the
bank's global head of wealth management feels the Asian unit,
which has less than $10 billion in assets, lacks the scale to
generate adequate profit, Reuters reported.
However, when contacted by this publication for comment, the
Toronto-headquartered bank said it is dedicated to the Asia
region.
“We don't comment on rumours or speculation but we serve an
important high net worth and ultra-high net worth client base out
of Singapore and Hong Kong and remain committed to the region,”
the bank said last week in a emailed statement.